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Monday, April 15, 2013

Interview with Mindee Arnett

I'm so excited to have Mindee Arnett, author of The Nightmare Affair, on the blog today answering my questions. Mindee Arnett is going to be one of seven amazing authors at the Fall in Love With Teen Fiction event at Powell's this week, so if you're near there, definitely put that on your calendar! This interview was so fun and I'm so happy to share it with you!

-------------------------

Synopsis: Sixteen-year-old Dusty Everhart breaks into houses late at night, but not because she's a criminal. No, she's a Nightmare.

Literally.

Being the only Nightmare at Arkwell Academy, a boarding school for magickind, and living in the shadow of her mother's infamy, is hard enough. But when Dusty sneaks into Eli Booker's house, things get a whole lot more complicated. He's hot, which means sitting on his chest and invading his dreams couldn't get more embarrassing. But it does. Eli is dreaming of a murder.

Then Eli's dream comes true.

Now Dusty has to follow the clues - both within Eli's dreams and out of them - to stop the killer before more people turn up dead. And before the killer learns what she's up to and marks her as the next target.

-------------------------

In the Best Worlds: Since
you write for teens, what were you like as a teenager?

Mindee Arnett: Not a very typical one, unfortunately. I’ve always been the “thirteen
going on thirty” girl. In high school all I wanted was to get out and be in
college. Looking back now, I wish I had been more focused on the present and
less on the future. Of course, this is probably why I like writing young adult
so much—to recapture my underappreciated youth.

ItBW: You
do such a fabulous job building the world of Arkwell Academy. What was the
hardest part of world building?

MA: The hardest stuff for me is always the “big picture.” The
day to day details of the world Dusty lives in, one with all the various
magical kinds and electronic equipment with lively personalities and so on,
came at once and without any deep thinking on my part. Bringing in the bigger
stuff, the logical context in which these details exist, is always harder. I
spent a lot of time asking myself questions about the politics behind the Will
and the implications of the racial (for lack of a better term) divisions
between the various magickinds. Not a lot of this bigger picture stuff makes it
into the story directly, but I have to be aware of it in order for the world to
have realistic cohesion.

ItBW: What
aspect of Dusty’s fantastic, magical world do you wish existed in real
life?

MA: Well, it would be cool if all of it existed, right? But I
guess if I had to choose one it might be idea that all of our myths and fairy
tales are actually true. That there really is a magical public relations
department ought there whose job over the centuries has been to convince human
beings that all fantastical stories are fiction.

ItBW: I
love the way you work Eli’s dreams into the narrative of this story. What
is the weirdest dream you remember?

MA: Oh I have so many dream stories to share. One of my most
distributing—and regularly occurring I might add—are dreams involving my teeth
falling out. In one particularly vivid one, I was singing on stage and the
entire rim of my top gums and all the teeth attached to it just broke off into
my mouth. Gross, right? I think this is what you call an anxiety dream. This
dream was so vivid it actually ended up in one of my story horror stories, Vatticut
Dead Man, which was published in a little
fiction magazine called Trail of Indiscretion.

ItBW: Was
there anything – characters, plot twists, scenes, etc - in The
Nightmare Affair that surprised you
while you were writing?

MA: Pretty much all of them. I’m very much a pantser when it
comes to writing. I don’t outline at all, although I do usually have an idea
about where the story is going and sometimes about certain scenes. But for the
most part, I discover the twists while writing. However, I will say that the
motivations and inner turmoil of one particular male character did surprise me
quite a lot, and continues to surprise me as I move on with the series. And I
think anybody who’s read the book will probably guess who I’m referring to.

ItBW: How
has your life changed since becoming a published author?

MA: You know, it really hasn’t. I’m a lot busier than I used to
be, of course, and my stress level has gone up 100%, but my day to day is more
or less the same. I still get up and go to my day job every morning and spend
the evenings with my husband, kids and pets. Really, aside from the times I’m
signing or doing a writing workshop I forget I’m a published author at all. So
much of being “published” happens out there
and well away from me my writing.

ItBW: So
excited that Nightmare Affair is
the first in a series! Is there anything you can dish about The
Nightmare Dilemma?

MA: Dilemma starts a couple of months after the events in The
Nightmare Affair. It’s approaching the end of the school year, and once again
Dusty is presented with a mystery that she must use her dream-seer skills to
solve, this one involving a vicious attack on one of her friends. She’s also
dealing with the aftermath of what happened in book 1, especially when it comes
to her relationship with Eli.

ItBW: Finish
these sentences:

We
could be best friends if…you love books and horses. Seriously, I share
one of these in common with pretty much all of my friends. Some of them I
even share both.

When
I was a kid, I wanted to grow up to be...an Archeologist (translation: I
wanted to be a female Indiana Jones)

Monday, April 15, 2013

Interview with Mindee Arnett

I'm so excited to have Mindee Arnett, author of The Nightmare Affair, on the blog today answering my questions. Mindee Arnett is going to be one of seven amazing authors at the Fall in Love With Teen Fiction event at Powell's this week, so if you're near there, definitely put that on your calendar! This interview was so fun and I'm so happy to share it with you!

-------------------------

Synopsis: Sixteen-year-old Dusty Everhart breaks into houses late at night, but not because she's a criminal. No, she's a Nightmare.

Literally.

Being the only Nightmare at Arkwell Academy, a boarding school for magickind, and living in the shadow of her mother's infamy, is hard enough. But when Dusty sneaks into Eli Booker's house, things get a whole lot more complicated. He's hot, which means sitting on his chest and invading his dreams couldn't get more embarrassing. But it does. Eli is dreaming of a murder.

Then Eli's dream comes true.

Now Dusty has to follow the clues - both within Eli's dreams and out of them - to stop the killer before more people turn up dead. And before the killer learns what she's up to and marks her as the next target.

-------------------------

In the Best Worlds: Since
you write for teens, what were you like as a teenager?

Mindee Arnett: Not a very typical one, unfortunately. I’ve always been the “thirteen
going on thirty” girl. In high school all I wanted was to get out and be in
college. Looking back now, I wish I had been more focused on the present and
less on the future. Of course, this is probably why I like writing young adult
so much—to recapture my underappreciated youth.

ItBW: You
do such a fabulous job building the world of Arkwell Academy. What was the
hardest part of world building?

MA: The hardest stuff for me is always the “big picture.” The
day to day details of the world Dusty lives in, one with all the various
magical kinds and electronic equipment with lively personalities and so on,
came at once and without any deep thinking on my part. Bringing in the bigger
stuff, the logical context in which these details exist, is always harder. I
spent a lot of time asking myself questions about the politics behind the Will
and the implications of the racial (for lack of a better term) divisions
between the various magickinds. Not a lot of this bigger picture stuff makes it
into the story directly, but I have to be aware of it in order for the world to
have realistic cohesion.

ItBW: What
aspect of Dusty’s fantastic, magical world do you wish existed in real
life?

MA: Well, it would be cool if all of it existed, right? But I
guess if I had to choose one it might be idea that all of our myths and fairy
tales are actually true. That there really is a magical public relations
department ought there whose job over the centuries has been to convince human
beings that all fantastical stories are fiction.

ItBW: I
love the way you work Eli’s dreams into the narrative of this story. What
is the weirdest dream you remember?

MA: Oh I have so many dream stories to share. One of my most
distributing—and regularly occurring I might add—are dreams involving my teeth
falling out. In one particularly vivid one, I was singing on stage and the
entire rim of my top gums and all the teeth attached to it just broke off into
my mouth. Gross, right? I think this is what you call an anxiety dream. This
dream was so vivid it actually ended up in one of my story horror stories, Vatticut
Dead Man, which was published in a little
fiction magazine called Trail of Indiscretion.

ItBW: Was
there anything – characters, plot twists, scenes, etc - in The
Nightmare Affair that surprised you
while you were writing?

MA: Pretty much all of them. I’m very much a pantser when it
comes to writing. I don’t outline at all, although I do usually have an idea
about where the story is going and sometimes about certain scenes. But for the
most part, I discover the twists while writing. However, I will say that the
motivations and inner turmoil of one particular male character did surprise me
quite a lot, and continues to surprise me as I move on with the series. And I
think anybody who’s read the book will probably guess who I’m referring to.

ItBW: How
has your life changed since becoming a published author?

MA: You know, it really hasn’t. I’m a lot busier than I used to
be, of course, and my stress level has gone up 100%, but my day to day is more
or less the same. I still get up and go to my day job every morning and spend
the evenings with my husband, kids and pets. Really, aside from the times I’m
signing or doing a writing workshop I forget I’m a published author at all. So
much of being “published” happens out there
and well away from me my writing.

ItBW: So
excited that Nightmare Affair is
the first in a series! Is there anything you can dish about The
Nightmare Dilemma?

MA: Dilemma starts a couple of months after the events in The
Nightmare Affair. It’s approaching the end of the school year, and once again
Dusty is presented with a mystery that she must use her dream-seer skills to
solve, this one involving a vicious attack on one of her friends. She’s also
dealing with the aftermath of what happened in book 1, especially when it comes
to her relationship with Eli.

ItBW: Finish
these sentences:

We
could be best friends if…you love books and horses. Seriously, I share
one of these in common with pretty much all of my friends. Some of them I
even share both.

When
I was a kid, I wanted to grow up to be...an Archeologist (translation: I
wanted to be a female Indiana Jones)